ItJustDonn
@ItJustDonn@slrpnk.net
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
Vampires do self-host. They
- use liquid temperature regulation
- transmit P2P to flash images on new devices
- have a future-proof frontend
- use cloud backup
- unless you caught one by surprise, their only real surface of attack requires physical access to the backend
- Comment on Self-hostable bookmark app Hoarder has been rebranded to Karakeep after a long trademark dispute 4 weeks ago:
Makes sense. The videos I saw about setting it up mentioned a headless chrome browser. But I’m new to self-hosting and didn’t know if it had to be chrome or if you could use a better option, since you can use an OLLAMA instead of chatgpt for example
- Comment on Self-hostable bookmark app Hoarder has been rebranded to Karakeep after a long trademark dispute 4 weeks ago:
This looks really cool. Can anyone explain to me if a headless chrome browser is dangerous the way a regular chrome browser is? I’m only hesitant because I don’t know
- Comment on Selfhosting Sunday - What's up? 1 month ago:
This is good to know because I’m learning about nginx currently, so I’m glad it has practical use without opening up my network 🤘
- Comment on Selfhosting Sunday - What's up? 1 month ago:
What a relief, thanks for the clarity! I have vague memories of doing that as a teenager to play various games, which sounds like something risky a teenager would do 😅
- Comment on Selfhosting Sunday - What's up? 1 month ago:
Shoutout to @Estebiu for helping me appreciate the joy of docker compose. I got to set up Navidrome and it’s been great!
With that said, I have a security-related question: at what point in self-hosting am I exposed to the outside internet that warrants things like reverse proxies and other security measures? I’m currently typing router IPs (e.g. 192.168.x.x) to access the services, so is my machine exposed if the only people intending to connect are local on our wireless network?